Spectral zonal filter

ABSTRACT

This invention relates to spectral zonal photography in which spectral zones of a scene are stored with unique respective carrier modulations on a colorblind photostorage medium such as a black-and-white panchromatic film from which the scene can be reconstructed in color by Fourier transform techniques with spatial and spectral filtering, and in particular to methods and means to effect such storage without the intervention of a plurality of separate individual images of the scene. Each of several spectral zones is modulated with a periodic function, such as a grating having a unique orientation relative to the scene. Embodiments are disclosed in which these zones and their respective modulations can be stored in sequence or simultaneously. Unique spectral zonal filters are disclosed for simultaneous storage of several spectral zones of a scene. In one aspect of the invention such filters can be employed in direct contact with the storage medium. In another embodiment. Fourier transform techniques are employed with spatial and spectral filtering to effect simultaneous storage of several spectral zones of a scene. In all embodiments the final storage of colorcoded information in a colorblind storage medium is useful to reconstruct the original scene in the original colors or in any desired portion or portions of the visible spectrum by means of Fourier transform and filtering techniques. The reconstructed scene can be viewed in full color or recorded on a colorsensitive medium.

Primary Examiner-John K. Corbin Attorney-Alfred H. Rosen ABSTRACT: This invention relates to spectral zonal photography in which spectral zones of a scene are stored with unique respective carrier modulations on. a colorblind photostorage medium such as a black-and-white panchromatic film from which the scene can be reconstructed in color by Fourier transform techniques with spatial and spectral filtering, and in particular to methods and means to effect such storage without the intervention of a plurality of separate individual images of the scene. Each of several spectral zones is modulated with a periodic function, such as a grating having a unique orientation relative to the scene. Embodiments are disclosed in which these zones and their respective modulations can be stored in sequence or simultaneously. Unique spectral zonal filters are disclosed for simultaneous storage of several spectral zones of a scene. In one aspect of the invention such filters can be employed in direct contact with the storage medium. In another embodiment. Fourier transform techniques are employed with spatial and spectral filtering to effect simultaneous storage of several spectral zones of a scene. In all embodiments the final storage of color-coded in- United States Patent [72] Inventor Peter F. Mueller Concord, Mass. 810,897

[21] Appl. No. [22] Filed 1 Divis [73] Assignee Technical Operations, Incorporated 7 Burlington, Mass.

[54] SPECTRAL ZONAL FILTER 5 Claims, 17 Drawing Figs.

[50] FieldofSearch................ .350/162, 162SF [56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS md ree Br-HV wmwwm mmFmm f e mm ms W l m mml l3 2 nau v n m w 0 w a .lm wwn O mrO I a 0 6 dllT X eaC.r. l.\ x mmmmm F emsue m C 3 m mk P P 2 e. m..m m .52.. i n b 7 m o 4 a m .m 6 \II l m mem 4 X om l hf lnfi wm.md C ilnn P .m. e i m mm m emm o fv 3 m m m m mm 2.4 4.54 .H .13 .1 cc 0000 mmw n n w sear .wmpflmm Q f X XXXX U UUUU 2 FFFF, 6 SSSS H 2222 0 6666 HHHH 0000 5555 33 s SS v0vv c ohoo c .CMCC 0 a aa B MSMM 8 8908 3 6676 9 9999 H HUN 6 4942 1 83 062 43 07 t i 08049 2770 3 .5 3333 PATENTED SEP28 um SHEET 1 [IF 8 IRO-Q-POOI 2w I (1+3- PETER FMUE'LLER INVENTOR BY= ROSE/V8 S TE/NH/LPER d JOHN h! COULT ATTORNEYS TRANSMISSION PATENIEn SEP28 \sn 3509.010

SHEET 2 UF 8 IMAX.

PETER EMUELLER INVENTOR BY= ROSE/V 8 STE/VH/LPER JOHN/'1 COUL 7' ATTORNEYS PAIENTED-Smwn 3,609,010

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PETER [MUELLER INVENTOR BY= ROSE/V 8 STE/dNI-IILPEI? 0n JOHN H. COUL T ATTORNEYS 11111111111 serzalsn 116021.010

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PETER EMUELLER Q4 INVENTOR ROSE/V a I I I I I I I J .STE/NH/LPER 0.0 0.3 0.6 0.9 1.2 1.5 1.8 2.1 2.4 and RELATIVE LOG EXPOSURE JOHN H cow] ATTORNEYS PATENTED 928191: (8,-6051010 sum 7 0r 8 PETER F. MUELLER INVENTOR BY= ROSEN 8 .STE/NH/LPER and JOHN H COUL 7' ATTO RNEYS PATEN'HTED strzs ml 21,609 ,0 1 0 sumaurs FIG. n A w V ww- I I C PETER FMUELLER. INVENTOR and W. (5) k f( B=ROSEN8STEINHILPER JOHN H. couLr ATTORNEYS SPECTRAL ZONAL FILTER This is a division of application Ser. No. 564,340 filed on July 1 l, 1966, now abandoned in favor of application Ser. No. 795,879 filed on Feb. 3, 1969.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The production of a true-colored image of a color scene has engaged workers in the photographic arts almost since the beginnings of practical photography. Early attempts proceeded along one path seeking a recording material which would produce the colored image directly, and along another path seeking to produce a record in color blind (e.g. blackand-white) recording material, from which a true-colored image of the scene could then be produced. In the approximately three-quarters of a century that has elapsed since first records of these attempts appeared, success in making color sensitive recording material has been achieved to the point of availability to the general public, but complex technical problems have confined to the laboratory and to industrial usages processes which provide a colored image through the medium of colorblind records of color values of the original scene. Outstanding of these problems has been the need to make a separate record for each of the primary colors (usually three) from which the colored image is synthesized, with the attendant problem of registering the separate records in the colored image.

The problem of making the separate records was also attacked with physical as well as chemical techniques. An early example of the use of diffraction gratings to code" three primary color values of a scene is described in the British Journal of Photography, Aug. 3, 1906, pages 609-612 by Herbert E. Ives Improvements in the Diffraction Process of Color Photography. The background process of Prof. R. W. Wood (1899 using three gratings of different periodicities, is described in Wood's US. Pat. No. 755,983. Neither Wood nor Ives succeeded in avoiding the need to make a plurality of separate color records their grating configurations were complex and could not be made on one plate; attempts to do so led to even more complex gratings crossed with Joly lines; and the reproduction apparatus did not pass very much light to the eye.

Carlo Boccas US. Pat. No. 2,050,417 discloses a process employing diffraction gratings to encode color information on black and white storage media in a manner which makes possible improved illumination in the reproduction of the colored image. But, as do Wood and Ives, Bocca begins with three separate images of the original scene (i.e., three partial negative of the subject--first taken through three colored filters"), and fails to avoid the attendant registration problem.

DESCRIPTION OF THE. INVENTION A further object of the invention is to provide methods and means so to encode color information on a black-and-white storage medium in an ordinary camera, in the same way that an ordinary photograph of snapshot is taken, so that the invention may be made available to the general public. 7

Additional objects of the invention are to provide a storage technique, and means to carry it out, by which the color information will be of enhanced purity, and cross-products of two or more separate color values will be, minimized; and to provide improved reproduction of color images of the original scene.

These and other objects of the invention will become readily apparent from the following description of several embodiments. This description refers to the accompanying drawings, wherein:

FIG. 1 illustrates the steps of a process for sequentially storing spectral zonal information for three separate zones with unique periodic intensity modulations in a single black-andwhite storage medium;

FIG. 2 schematically illustrates the separate spectral-zonal images stored by the individual steps of FIG. 1;

FIG. 3 schematically illustrates the final storage of three spectral-zonal images obtained with the process of FIG. 1;

FIG. 4A illustrates a spectral-zonal filter of the subtractive or negative type suitable for simultaneous. storage of three spectral zones of a scene with unique periodic modulations in a black-and-white or other colorblind" but panchromatic storage medium;

FIG. 4B is a graph illustrating the ideal transmissivities of the filter elements of FIG. 4A;

FIG. 5 illustrates the use of the filter of FIG. 4A in an ordinary camera;

FIG. 6 is a graphical illustration of a density versus log exposure curve for reversal processing of photographic films, useful in explaining a technique which may be employed in practicing the invention;

FIG. 7 is graphical illustration of double negative processing to obtain the results of the reversal processing of FIG. 6

FIG. 8 illustrates a system for reconstructing color images by means of a Fourier transform of the stored record and spatial and spectral filtering, along the general lines suggested by Boccas Pat. No. 2,050,417;

FIG. 8A is a detail sketch illustrating the use of a spatial and spectral filter in FIG. 8;

FIG. 8B is a detail sketch illustrating an alternative spectral and spatial filter;

FIGS. 9A and 9B are schematic illustrations of two cameras, similar in principle, for making a multispectral zone image in colorblind storage material by Fourier transform techniques applied to an image of the scene followed by spatial and spectral filtering;

FIG. 10 is a detail sketch illustrating the Fourier transform configuration used in the systems of FIGS. 9A and 9B; and

FIGS. 11A, 11B and 11C show a set of detail sketches illustrating the process of color-coding used in the systems of FIGS. 9A and 98.

For the purposes of the present disclosure, the basic equation for a color scene may be described as:

This basic equation describes the energy distribution in the image plane of a camera. When the color components are blue, green and red, the energy distribution is the sum of three components at each point in the scene.

The final storage of color-coded information in a colorblind e.g. black-and-white) recording from which the original color scene can be reconstructed, one would like the storage to be according to the following equation:

wavelength (A); and

I- (x) -P(;)L 1 represents the intensity distribution in the wavelength band A, as a function of spatial coordinates (x) multiplied by the periodic modulation (P) of the light in that band as a function of spatial v coordinates with the azimuthal characteristic 04,. It will be understood that the wavelength bands can be blue, green and red, and the periodic modulations can be given azimuthal characteristic oriented at angles a, (a+1r/3) and (a+21r/3), respectively, as one fairly obvious example, in which case Relation 2 would take the form:

M1)? (EHMFMQ'PQ) 3 (Relation 2A) Referring to FIGS. 1 and 2, an object 10, which for the sake of illustration may be a photographic color transparency in which there is a two-dimensional image represented by the double-headed arrows Ill and I2, is imaged by optical means represented by lens 13 onto a colorblind photostorage material 14, a suitable example of which is panchromatic black and white photographic film, preferably of the high contrast and high resolution variety. The object 10, optics l3 and photostorage material 14 remain fixed relative to one another throughout the process about to be described. The source of light (not shown) may be any available white light, such as daylight.

As shown in FIG. IA, a blue filter 16 is interposed between the object and photostorage material M, a diffraction grating 15 is interposed between the filter and the photostorage material, for example, directly on the photostorage material. The diffraction grating may be any suitable grating of periodic opaque and transparent regions, for example, in the configuration of a Ronchi ruling having opaque lines 15.1 on a transparent support. The showing in FIG. 1 is exemplary only and does not represent any particular form of grating.

- The grating can be placed at various locations between the object 10 and the photostorage material 14 as long as the grating and the object are imaged as a product in the photostorage; that is, the object 10 and the grating 15 should be optically multiplied in the photostorage material 14, and r not merely added therein. This can be done, for example, by placing the grating directly in contact with thephotostorage material 14. The image which is recorded by incoherent illumination through the blue filter 16 will then be the product of the intensity due to blue light as a function of the coordinates (g) in the recorded image and, in the present illustration, the periodic variation of the grating 15 in a single dimension (2:) oriented in a prescribed azimuthal direction (a), as indicated at 26 in FIG. 2 immediately beneath FIG. 1A.

FIG. 1B is identical to FIG. 1A except that a green filter 17 has been substituted for the blue filter and the grating 15 has been rotated in azimuth (1r/3) about the axis of the system. Another exposure of the object 10 is then made, which records another image in the photostorage material M as shown at 27 in FIG. 2, immediately below FIG. 1B. This image is mathematically described as the product of intensity due to exposure of the object through the green filter as a function of the spatial coordinates (x) and the periodic function of the grating in a single dimension (x) oriented in the azimuthal direction a-l-1r/3. A third exposure is then made as illustrated at FIG. 1C through a red filter 18 with the grating 15 rotated a further 60 (211/3) degrees to place on the photostorage material 14 a third image illustrated at 28 in FIG. 2 immediately below FIG. 1C, which is mathematically described as the product of the intensity of the exposure of the object 10 through the red filter 18 as a function of spatial coordinates (5) and the periodic variation of the grating in a single dimension (x) oriented in the azimuthal direction 0+2 17/3.

These three exposures are added in the final black-andwhite storage 29, which is schematically illustrated in FIG. 3, where the double-headed arrows 1.1 and 12 representing the original object have been reproduced and the grating images 26, 27 and 28 are superposed in the same recording area. The mathematical sum of the three products shown in FIG. 2 is set out under FIG. 3. This is the final storage of color-coded information in the color blind (black-and-white) image, according to relation 2, from which the original color scene can be reconstructed by Fourier transform techniques and spatial and spectral filtering. The stored image 29 is desirably a trans: parency.

The system illustrated in FIG. 1 has the virtue not heretofore available that the scene being photographed, the recording medium on which it is being photographed, and the optical elements which focus the image of the scene on the recording medium, all remain fixed relative to each other throughout the entire process of recording the coded images representative of the color bands into which the scene is broken down. Thus, since separate color coded images are not made on separate pieces of recording media, the problem of registering such images is eliminated. The final color-coded black-and-white record shown in FIG. 3 is obtained directly, without the intervention of the separate records of elemental color-coded. images. The three diapositives mentioned in BoccaPat. No. 2,050,417, for example, are eliminated completely FIG. 4A illustrates a negative color filter consisting of the superposition of three colored Ronchi rulings having respective unique azimuthal characteristics, e.g.: rotated in 1r/3 increments from one another. FIG. 4B shows ideally the required spectral transmissions of the respective rulings. Vertical bars 45 in FIG. 4A represent yellow bara, with transparent bars intervening; these comprise a yellow Ronchi ruling having periodicity P (5), which generally is represented mathematically by uLn w Similarly, a magenta ruling 46 is generally represented by V mul w and a cyan ruling 47 is generally represented by Ew n- In each of these rulings the respective transmission spectra in FIG. 4B refer to the absorbing portion of the ruling (the portion that would be opaque in a ruling consisting of opaque bars or lines separated by transparent bars or lines), while the intervening portions are preferably transparent passing all visible wavelengths substantially unattenuated.

The three rulings are superposed, so that they are multiplied,

each with the others, and the product of their respective modulations as a function of spatial coordinates (g) and wavelengths A is:

When it is realized, however, that the magenta and cyan filters each transmit blue, and that the blue light does not see these filters, it is apparent that the terms involving P,,,and P should not appear in practice. Ideally, the transmittance of blue through magenta and cyan filters is unity, in the sense that the magenta and cyan filters are not a function of the spatial coordinates (g) for blue; thus, the terms P, and I" are constants with relation to Q), and have a value of unity for an ideal dye, so that, for practical purposes we can set:

rem-13( ra e-Papa (Rela ion 4) (Relation 5) (Relation 6) Hence multiplication of the acene (relation 1) with the negative filter (relation 3) yields Relation 2 in the form:

LAW) 5 1: L YQ) Ia 'i G d-R1105) la +1 (.2) .Pc (:3) [a (Relation 28) The negative color filter consists of negative or subtractive color dyes on a background which may be transparent to white light.

Multiplicative filters according to FIG. 4A may be made by the process illustrated in FIG. 1, using any commercially available three-layer color film, of which Ektachrome" or Kodacolor Eastman Kodak Co.), Anscochrome" (General Aniline and Film Co.), or Agfacolor (Agfa Aktiengesellschaft Leverkusen-Bayerwerk), are representative examples. Ektachrome has been found to be particularly suitable. A filter has been made from it, as is now described.

Ektachrome is constituted of three layers having, respectively, yellow dye (minus blue), magenta dye (minus green) and cyan dye (minus red). Following a scheme according to FIG. 1 using a Ronchi ruling, a piece of this film was exposed through a blue color filter as in FIG. 1A, then through a green color filter as in FIG. 1B, and then through a red color filter as in FIG. 1C. The piece of film thus exposed was developed, not as a reversal film as is ordinarily done, but by the Kodak Color Process C-22, available from Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester N.Y., for their negative films Kodacolor and Ektacolor. The use of Process C-22 to produce a negative from Ektachrome is known in the open literature. By this process, the yellow layer produces yellow grating lines in response to the blue light, the magenta layer produces magenta lines in response to the green light, and the cyan layer produces cyan lines in response to the red light. White lines were produced in each layer wherever the Ronchi ruling was black. This process produced exactly the multiplicative filter which is illustrated in FIG. 4A. A similar filter can be made using Anscochrome and developing by Kodak Color Process C-22. Kodacolor and Agfacolor films are also useful, but these have a bright yellow background which may be objectionable.

While the filter of FIG; 4A is illustrated as composed of Ronchi rulings, the gratings need not be limited to this configuration. Filters constructed of any periodic function, from simple harmonic to a square wave, can be used. The spatial frequency (w, in lines/mm.) of each grating used in any embodiment of the invention should be chosen such that where 21, is the image spatial bandwidth, in order to satisfy the sampling theorem. In a Ronchi ruling, each period (p-l /w,,) is divided evenly between the opaque bar (b) and the transparent bar (a), so that FP/Q. g

Grating configurations may be used in which a Era/2, and in which, in place of square wave functions which bars provide other functions are used. Ronchi rulings were found convenient in FIG. 4A because of their relative simplicity and because they allow a high degree of light transmission while providing effective color-code modulation.

A positive" color filter, that is, one contracted of positive colors, can also be made in a multilayer color medium, along the same general lines as the negative filter of FIG. 4A, employing three superimposed gratings in the form of Relation 3, but with red, green and blue substituted for their respective negative colors and with black or opaque spaces between the colorlines. However, multiplication of such a positive filter with a color scene will approximate an expression like Relation 2 only if the color line (slit") widths (a) of each grating are very narrow compared to the period length p of the grating. A suitable relationship is Such a color filter will require resolution, in the black-andwhite photostorage medium, on the order of 5a)., to 101, depending in the spectral purity required, and the speed.,of the photostorage medium will be efiectively reduced by the'tnost severe filter factor (on the order of 10-15 for the blue zone). However, use of this positive" filter would permit certain freedoms in photostorage, as will be explained below.

The negative filter of FIG. 4A, or the corresponding positive filter described above, can be multiplied with a scene and the individually modulated color products can be summed in a photostorage medium simply by placing the filter in a camera in contact with a piece of black and white panchromatic film, as is illustrated in FIG. 5. In this illustration a camera 50 is shown having a photographic plate 51 in the film plane of its lens 54, the scene being represented by an object 52. A suitable filter 53 (negative" according to FIG. 4A or positive as described above, for example) is shown in contact with the plate 51. The photographic plate has only one photostorage layer on it. The exposures through the three gratings of the filter are therefore simultaneously added in the photostorage on the plate 51. The resulting final black-andwhite storage of color-coded information is thus the sum of products according to Relation 2, and has a configuration substantially as is schematically shown in FIG. 3. It may be a transparency. In this embodiment of the invention, however, the color-coded bIack-and-white image of the scene is ob tained in a single step in an ordinary camera, and can therefore be used by even the unskilled amateur photographer.

In general, the multiplicative filter, whether negative or positive, should be so constructed that all of its color absorbing elements are in a thin layer so that the layer may be brought into intimate contact with the recording emulsion of the colorblind storage medium. Good contact between filter and recording emulsion is important to maintain high contrast in the carrier modulation image. In addition to the technique described above for constructing the filter by color coupling in thin high resolution silver halide emulsions, other examples of approaches which are compatible with this thin layer requirement are:

a. successive diazo coatings on a suitable substrate;

b. interference filter elements in ruling arrays; and

c. dye-coupled ruling images in single or multiple silver halide emulsion layer.

The sum of images stored in a configuration according to FIG. 3, whether by serial addition according to FIG. 1, or by simultaneous addition, as illustrated for example in FIG. 5, can be separated by Fourier transform techniques with partially coherent polychromatic light. Bocca Pat. No. 2,050,417 suggests in its FIG. 6 a system for performing the separation, in which the stored black-and-white image is the projection positive located at position A-B-C-D. Bocca illustrates in his FIG. 4 an idealized representation of diffraction orders along the primary axes of diffraction due to the three'gratings stored in the projection positive. In practice, however, I have found that, due mainly to nonlinearities in photographic processing of the black-and-white color-coded stored image, this idealized representation is not achieved, but instead cross-products appear along axes parallel with the primary axes. These crossproducts can cause degradation in the reproduction of the original color scene unless steps are taken to minimize their effects. Use of a narrow-line grating, as in the positive" filter I have described above, or with very wide opaque lines 15.1 in FIG. 1, will minimize the effects of such cross-products in the reproduction. If, for example, the width (a) of transparent lines is such that the relationship agp is observed, nonlinearities in the photographic processin g bf the color-coded black-and-white stored image can be ignored, for practical purposes, even though systems according to the invention require the storage of continuous tone, rather than mere binary images. This will, however, be done at the expense of the resolution requirements described above.

Degradation of the reconstructed image due to crossproducts in the Fourier transform of the color-coded blackand-white stored image can be reduced to insignificance by processing the bIack-and-white storage images so that the amplitude transmission in the stored image is linearly proportional to the input intensity (i.e.: exposure) in recording the image. If this is done, the cross-products are eliminated and the separation of color zones in the transform plane is mathematically exact, and the storage film need only resolve the fundamental carrier frequency.

It has been found mathematically that the cross-products .parency was displayed in a coherent system according to FIG.

can be eliminated by making the amplitude transmission of the object transparency linearly proportional to the input intensity (exposure) by which the exposures were made. To obtain this result requires an analysis of the density-versus-log-exposure where K=l0-D -v rm The amplitud"transrnission forthe transparency can b e 7 stated as:%x)= /T (w)=x KI() 2 In these equations:

T,(5) is the intensity transmission K is a constant 7 [(5) is the intensity distribution of an image formed by uniformly illuminating a transparency y is the slope of the density-versus-log-exposure D curve is the base density of the photographic material I is time duration of exposure T,,(.;) is the amplitude transmission.

The equation for amplitude transmission can be made linear with input intensity transmission by setting gamma equal to -2. It must be recognized however that for this to have any valid effect the gamma should also be constant. For example, it becomes important that no image exposure be made in a nonlinear portion of the density-versus-log-exposure curve.

In processing the images for a constant gamma of -2, it is necessary to relate this gamma to the coherence of the optical system. Measured density-versus-Iog-exposure curves vary with the conditions of measurement. Thus curves measured with a densitometer, a microdensitometer, and in a coherent system may differ one from the others. These differences are apparently due to differences in diffuse and spectral density which in turn relate to the graininess of the photographic emulsion. For the present invention, the gamma should be determined by measurement in an optical system of the same degree of coherence as is sued to reconstruct and display the colored images. I

The following two examples illustrate specific methods that have been used in practicing the invention.

EXAMPLE I The photographic plate 51 used in the camera had a reversal process, density-versus-log-exposure curve with a gamma of 2 as illustratedin FIG. 6. The plate'was uniformly preexposed so that the object exposures fill in the straight portion of the exposure curve. The maximum total exposure was limited so that this also did not go beyond the straight line portion of the curve. The plate was then reversal processed as a direct positive.

The original colored image was reconstructed and read out in the coherent system of FIG. 8. The displayed image was of true color and good quality with no noticeable ghosting of the cross-product images observable upon close scrutiny.

EXAMPLE ll Exposures were made the same as in Example! but using a film '51 normally processed'to a gamma of one-half as shown by curve 41 in FIG. 7. Again the film was uniformly preexposed to eliminate the nonlinear toe of the exposure curve and the maximum exposure was also limited so as to remain in the straight line portion of the curve. This film was normally processed and then projection printed onto a high resolution plate having a normal process gamma of 4 as shown in curve 42 of FIG. 7. Again normal processing was used and the result was a transparency as shown in, curve 43 having an intensity transmittance equal to the square of the input intensity as represented by curve 40. Thus the output amplitude transmittance is proportional to the input exposure. This trans- 8 with results similar to those in Example I.

FIG. 8 illustrates diagrammatically an optical system for reconstructing and viewing or recording colored images that t are stored in black-and-white as described above. FIG. 8 illustrates a fairly conventional partially-coherent optical system comprising a light source 60, pinhole aperture 61, light collector lens 62, converging (or transform) lenses 63 and 65 separated by the sum of their focal lengths f, and f,, frame means 66 for supporting the color-coded black-and-white transparency 29 and support means 67 for supporting a photosensitive color medium or a display screen. A color reconstruction filter 68, details of which are shown in FIG. 8A, is located in the back focal plane of the first transform lens 23 and the front focal plane of the second transfonn lens 25. For simplicity of illustration, only the grating modulation lines at three different angles are shown in the black-andwhite stored image 29, but it will be understood that this image is a transparency containing original object information as well as grating information. 7 1

For purposes of the invention, light source should be an intense polychromatic light source; an arc lamp will be suitable.

The pinhole aperture 61 is used to increase the coherency of the light and the collector lens 62 following the aperture can provide a light beam of a selected diameter for illuminating the system. With a collimated light beam the distance between the collector lens and the following components of the system becomes noncritical. With an uncollimated light beam magnification can be obtained.

The color reconstruction filter 68 in the back focal plane of the first lens 63 is located in the Fourier transform plane. The light beam from the collecting lens 62 is brought to a point focus at the transform plane. The light from the source 60 must be at least partially coherent at the illumination plane where the stored image 29 image 29 supported in frame 66 is illuminated. The required degree of coherence is related to the carrier frequency. Preferably the coherence interval (the distance between two extreme points in a light field which still exhibit interference) should be equal to or greater than a few periods lengths of the carrier frequency.

With the black-and-white color-coded stored image 29 positioned in frame 66, a diffraction pattern will appear in the transform plane. This diffraction pattern is depicted at the location of the color reconstruction filter 68. Light from the source 60 that is undisturbed by the recorded image 29 will be focused to the center of the transform plane as spot illustrated V as the central illumination spot 70. This spot represents the zero order of each grating and is commonly called the DC spot. Since this spot is independent of grating orientation it 7 will be common to all of the individual color-band images superimposed in the stored image 29. A vertical series of spots 71 represents diffraction orders of the horizontal grating related, for example, to the blue exposure a FIG. 1A. Extending out in both directions beyond the zero diffraction order are the first and several higher diffraction orders.

The diffraction orders 72 related for example to the green exposure in FIG. 1B are in a line azimuthally rotated 60 clockwise from the diffraction orders 71, and the diffraction orders 73 related for example to the red exposure of FIG. 1C are in a line rotated azimuthally 60 clockwise from the diffraction orders 72.

FIG. 8 shows only diffraction orders along the primary axes of diffraction. If appropriate steps are taken, as described above, cross-products will not appear along axes parallel with the primary axes. v I

Reconstruction of the original color scene is obtained by placing a color reconstruction filter 68 as illustrated, for example, in FIG. 8A in the transform plane of FIG. 8. The color reconstruction filter is, in this illustration, opaque at the center 69, to block the DC spot 70. Arrayed about the center in diametrically-opposed pairs are six equal sectors of color filter material. A pair of blue filter sectors (B, B) are located in the path of light forming the diffraction orders 71 related to the blue exposure, a pair of green filter sectors are located in the path of light forming the diffraction orders 72 related to the green exposure, and a pair of red filter sectors are located in the path of light forming the diffraction orders 73 related to the red exposure (all referred, for example, to FIG. 1). A

reconstruction, in full color, of the original scene 11, 12 appears in the plane of the support means 67, where it can be recorded on color-sensitive photographic film, or observed on a screen. This reconstruction would contain gratinglike images (fringes) since more than one diffraction order is passed on each sector. By passing only one diffraction order through each sector or by destroying temporal coherence between orders from each grating, continuous tone reconstructions may be obtained without the presence of fringes. FIG. 8B shows a spectral and spatial filter 68A which passes one order through aperture 71a in one sector (blue), one order through aperture 72a in a second sector (green), and one order through aperture 73d in the third sector (red). The rest of this filter 68A is opaque.

FIG. 9A shows a camera system for multiple zone recording of spectral information in a color'scene. In this figure, the plane of the object 110', corresponding to the object 10 in FIG. 1, is located by a pair of lines 111 and 112 crossing on the axis of the system. An ordinary achromatic camera lens 113, fitted with an adjustable-iris stop 114, focuses an image 120 of the object in an image plane, which is located by a pair of lines 121 and 122 crossing on the system axis. Consistent with notation familiar to workers in the art, the object may be termed (5), and the image may be termed 1(1), where (g) represents the spatial coordinates in the object plane and represents the spatial coordinates in the image plane.

The components thus-far described are those found in a camera. The object plane-to-lens (iris stop) distance is p and the lens-to-image plane distance is q,, in accordance with the general relationship:

is the focal length of the lens involved. In place of the usual film and back, however, the system of FIG. 9A has a special neutral density grating 130 in the image plane. The plane of this grating is located in FIG. 9A by a pair of lines 131 and 132 crossing on the system axis. The special grating 130 has, for the purposes of describing this embodiment, three-gratings in a configuration as shown in FIG. 4A, in which each grating in a one-dimensional black-and-white cosine ruling of spatial frequency w and has an amplitude transmission represented by:

P( y represents the periodic modulation of the grating in one dimension in the image plane, and a b. For the three zone system under description the amplitude where transmission is:

transfo rm pl ane may be designated the (u) plane, and the image convolved with the grating may be designated 17( *IQZ). Two lines 141 and 142 crossing on the system axis locate the transform plane.

- TheFourier transform of the special grating 130, designated 19:) is represented schematically in FIG. 10, in which the relative intensity distributions in the zero and first ordersare shown, but no spectral distribution is indicated. The zero order is represented by a spot 145. The first orders of the grating at a, are represented by spots 146; those of the grating at 0: by spots 147; and those of the gratings at a, by spots 1 48. Since gratings are all simple harmonic functions (cosine) the grating orders in the transform plane are delta functions, and no orders higher than the first order appear; the spots 146, 147 and 148 represent the delta function positions of 17 i The term [L in FIG. 10 represents the separation of each first order position from the zero order.

The amplitude distribution of the camera'lens exit pupil (i.e. the iris stop (114) distribution) is replicated by the special grating 1r('y) so as to be convolved about each of the delta functioripfisitions in the transform plane 140. When the iris l 14 is stopped down so that the diameter of the iris image is [1. or less, these iris stop replication images become separated in the transform plane. This is shown more clearly, and in greater detail in FIGS. 11A and 118.

In FIG. 11A the position of each first-order delta function spot in FIG. 10 is taken by a series of smaller dots representing the spectral distribution in the diffraction order. Thus, for example, three small dots 146.1, 146.2 and 146.3 are shown for the grating at a representing the centers, respectively, of the blue, green and red bands of the spectrum, spaced t, from the zero order spot 145. T he intensity distribution b /4 for this entire first-order spot 146 is also shown. FIG. 118 shows the convolution of the exit pupil distribution about each delta function. Reference characters have been assigned to exit pupil images 114.1 about dot 146.1, 114.2 about dot 146.2, and 114.3 about dot 146.3, respectively. For the sake of simplicity, and because it is not necessary to do so, additional reference characters have not been assigned in FIGS. 11A and 11B. It" is seen, however, that the Fourier transform of the image convolved with the grating contains the color information in the image, spatially dispersed. 1

Spectral band limiting of each of the three zones into which the image is separated by the grating is achieved in the transform plane by introduction of a spectral filter 150, which is located in the transform plane. This filter may be similar in construction to the filter of FIG. 8A, except that it need not stop the zero order. The plane of this filter is located by two lines 151 and 152 crossing on the system axis. This filter is the first element in the system to introduce color information, and it is therefore designated as S(p.,)l), a function of both spatial coordinates in the transform plane and of wavelength. As is in dicated in FIG. IlC, this filter is multiplied with the Fourier transform and passes red images from onc'gruting. hluc images from another grating, and green images from the third grating. The circles designated 114.3 represent the red images which are passed from the grating oriented at 01,. The circles designated 114.2 represent the green images which are passed from the grating oriented at a The circles designated 114.1 represent the blue images which are passed from the grating oriented at 01 If the zero order'is passed, portions of it will be shared by each color. While in this scheme the resolu tion is not identical for all colors, and it is realized that the iris '(I'(;)) would be if the second transform lens 155 were not present. This plane 160' is located a distance q, from the first transform lens 135, while the image plane 120 is located a distance p, in front of that lens. Plane 160 is located a distance p in front" of the second transform lens 155, while the final image plane ,160 is located a'distance q, in back of that lens. The iris stop 114 is located a distance p, in front of the first transform lens 135, and the transform plane 140 is located a distance q, in back of that lens. The image (l(z)) in the finalimage plane I60 may be described as:

(a) R(5)' l d- K I B( I,

(Relation 8) where the P fz) components are modified forms of the cosine fringes (P(y)), and the zonal components 1,;(5), l g) and 1 (1) form the image (Relation 9) As has already been described, color-coded images in the form of Relation 8 can be stored in a colorblind photostorage medium, from which, byspatial filtering with polychromatic light and spectral filtering with a filter similar, for example, to filter 68 (see FIGS. 8 and 8A), the individual spectral zones can be recombined to form a full color image of the original object. Thus, by merely placing a suitable black-and-white photostorage medium (not shown) in the film plane 160, and

suitably exposing it and developing it, a color-coded blackand-white stored image having the sameproperties as that represented in FIG. 3 is subsequently obtained in a camera system according to FIG. 9A.

The system of FIGS. 9-11 has several advantages, and unique properties. It will beobserved, first, that the special grating 130 is a blackand-white grating contracted in a single layer of photographic material. Color coding is not introduced until after this grating has been convolved with the image. The color coding spectral filter 150 is... physically easier to construct than a multicolor grating. Since delta functions appear in the transform plane, it is possible to use several gratings oriented closer together than 11/3, so that the achievable number of zones is greater than three. The purity of spectral zone separation is not restricted to any particular color scheme and, indeed, it is envisioned that different narrow color zones within a small segment of the spectrum can be separately coded and viewed or recorded Thus, if for research purposes one desires to investigate a narrow spectral zone, or even a line, withinthe blue or the red region for example, this narrow zone or line can be coded with any desired color and later viewed or recorded as represented by that coding color. This provides a useful application for the invention in the study of an aurora, for example.

In a practical example which has been constructed according to FIGS. 9A, 10 and 11, the spectral filter 150 was made for the conventional tricolor zones (red, green and blue) using Wratten filters 025, 058 and 047, respectively, with azimuthal characteristics a a, and a respectively. Neutral density filters were also introduced along with the color filters, to balance the exposure, to equalize the effects of:

a. spectral output of the illuminating source;

[)1 spectral transmission of the colored absorption filters;

and

c. spectral response of the recording emulsion.

In the case of a tungsten source with Panatomic-X film, these N.D.filtersare:

Red N. D.=O.50 with 025 Wratten GreenN.D.=0.40 with058 Wratten Blue --N.D.=0.00 with.047 Wratten The DC spot 145 can be blocked, but, if it is not, thespectral filter 150 is more efficient, reducing the required exposure time for making the stored image and reducing the film resolution requirements on the photostorage medium.

FIG. 9B shows another system which will accomplish the same purpose as the system of FIG, 9A. Similar parts of both figures have the same reference characters. FIG. 9B omits the second transform lens 155 of FIG. 9A, and the optical relationship p, and q, are altered. The optical distances p and q,, and p and q,, are similar in both figures.

If the negative" colorfilter of 'FIG. 4A is substituted in FIG. 9B (for example) for the special filter I30, then the spectral filter 150 can be eliminated, and the'lens 135 can be used as a relay lens to reimage the product of the imagel and the filter r(z, M onto a photostorage material located in the I (g) plane l60. This arrangement removes problems (if any) which may be associated with maintaining the grating in contact with the photostorage material. I

The foregoing description of certain embodiments of the invention is by way of example only, and not intended to limit the scope of the appended claims. Thus, for example, while transmission gratings have been illustrated as devices for modulating light with a periodic function, it will be understood that light modulation by reflection is included within the scope of the invention. No attempt has been made to illustrate all possible embodiments of the invention, but rather only to illustrate its principles and the best manner presently known to practice it. Therefore, such other forms of the invention as may occur to one skilled in this art on a reading of the foregoing specification are also within the spirit and scope of the invention, and it is intended that this invention includes all modifications and equivalents which fall within the scope of the appended claims.

Iclaim: I

1. A substantially two-dimensional light modulation filter for use in preparing from colored light representing a scene an image transparency suitable for producing by Fourier transform and spatial and spectral filtering techniques a-projected. image of said scene in prescribed colors, which may be natural or artificial, from n light components representing respective spectral zones of said colored light where n" is an integer greater than one, said filter having a plurality of n periodic functions each extending throughout the area of said filter and having a unique azimuthal characteristic in the area of .the filter for passing light representative of a unique wavelength band corresponding to a selected one of said spectral zones, said functions overlapping each other, the configuration of said functions being such that the light transmittance of said WheTe} M 5) is the mathematical representation of the total filter with transmittance a function of spatial coordinates 5 and wavelength A; PX is the periodic function corresponding to the wav"elength band A, with azimuthal characteristic a and X, is the average wavelength in the band from X AM to X, +AM', each periodic function being comprised of periodic alternately spectrally neutral elements and color filter elements capable of passing light limited to a unique wavelength band corresponding respectively to a selected one of said spectral zones, said neutral elements and said color filter elements occupying different fractions of the period length of said function such that light in said unique wavelength band istransmitted through said filter in a minor fraction of said period length and substantially blocked in a major fraction of said period length, said minor fraction being substantially smaller filter elements are subtractive primaries.

3. The filter defined by claim 2 wherein said minor fraction is substantially one-tenth.

4. The filter defined by claim 1 wherein said neutral ele- 

1. A substantially two-dimensional light modulation filter for use in preparing from colored light representing a scene an image transparency suitable for producing by Fourier transform and spatial and spectral filtering techniques a projected image of said scene in prescribed colors, which may be natural or artificial, from ''''n'''' light components representing respective spectral zones of said colored light where ''''n'''' is an integer greater than one, said filter having a plurality of ''''n'''' periodic functions each extending throughout the area of said filter and having a unique azimuthal characteristic in the area of the filter for passing light representative of a unique wavelength band corresponding to a selected one of said spectral zones, said functions overlapping each other, the configuration of said functions being such that the light transmittance of said filter is expressed as the product: (x, lambda ) P (x) .P (x) .--P (x) Where: (x, lambda ) is the mathematical representation of the total filter with transmittance a function of spatial coordinates x and wavelength lambda ; P (x) is the periodic function corresponding to the wavelength band lambda i with azimuthal characteristic Alpha i; and lambda i is the average wavelength in the band from lambda i- Delta lambda i to lambda i + Delta lambda i, each periodic function being comprised of periodic alternately spectrally neutral elements and color filter elements capable of passing light limited to a unique wavelength band corresponding respectively to a selected one of said spectral zones, said neutral elements and said color filter elements occupying different fractions of the period length of said function such that light in said unique wavelength band is transmitted through said filter in a minor fraction of said period length and substantially blocked in a major fraction of said period length, said minor fraction being substantially smaller than said major fraction.
 2. The filter defined by claim 1 wherein said neutral elements are substantially totally transmissive and said color filter elements are subtractive primaries.
 3. The filter defined by claim 2 wherein said minor fraction is substantially one-tenth.
 4. The filter defined by claim 1 wherein said neutral elements are substantially opaque and said color filter elements are additive primaries.
 5. The filter defined by claim 4 wherein said minor fraction is substantially one-tenth. 